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On Unix-like systems, users are represented by a user identifier, often abbreviated UID. The range of values for a UID varies amongst different systems; at the very least, a UID can be between 0 and 32767, with some restrictions:

  • The Superuser must always have a UID of zero (0).
  • The user "nobody" was traditionally assigned the largest possible UID (as the opposite of the Superuser), 32767. More recently, the user is assigned a UID in the system range (1–100, see below) or between 65530–65535.
  • UIDs from 1 to 100 are otherwise reserved for system use by convention; some manuals recommend that UIDs from 101 to 499 or even 511 be reserved as well.
The UID value references users in the /etc/passwd file. Shadow password files and Network Information Service also refer to numeric UIDs. The user identifier is a necessary component of Unix file systems and processes. Some operating systems might have support for 16-bit UIDs, making 65536 unique IDs possible, though a modern system with 32-bit UIDs will potentially make 4,294,967,296 (2 raised to the 32nd power) distinct values available.

See also


UID

Unix

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "User identifier (Unix)".

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